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Text -- Deuteronomy 12:1-10 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Temples, chapels, altars, groves, as appears from other scriptures.
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Wesley: Deu 12:2 - -- As the Gentiles consecrated divers trees to their false gods, so they worshipped these under them.
As the Gentiles consecrated divers trees to their false gods, so they worshipped these under them.
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Wesley: Deu 12:3 - -- That is, all the memorials of them, and the very names given to the places from the idols.
That is, all the memorials of them, and the very names given to the places from the idols.
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That is, not worship him in several places, mountains, and groves.
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Wesley: Deu 12:5 - -- That is, to set up his worship there, and which he shall call by his name, as his house, or his dwelling-place; namely, where the ark should be, the t...
That is, to set up his worship there, and which he shall call by his name, as his house, or his dwelling-place; namely, where the ark should be, the tabernacle, or temple: which was first Shiloh, and then Jerusalem. There is not one precept in all the law of Moses, so largely inculcated as this, to bring all their sacrifices to that one altar. And how significant is, that appointment? They must keep to one place, in token of their belief. That there is one God, and one Mediator between God and man. It not only served to keep up the notion of the unity of the godhead, but the one only way of approach to God and communion with him in and by his son.
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Wesley: Deu 12:6 - -- Which were wisely appropriated to that one place, for the security of the true religion, and for the prevention of idolatry and superstition, which mi...
Which were wisely appropriated to that one place, for the security of the true religion, and for the prevention of idolatry and superstition, which might otherwise more easily have crept in: and to signify that their sacrifices were not accepted for their own worth, but by God's gracious, appointment, and for the sake of God's altar, by which they were sanctified, and for the sake of Christ, whom the altar manifestly represented.
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Wesley: Deu 12:6 - -- That is, your first-fruits, of corn, and wine, and oil, and other fruits. And these are called the heave-offerings of their hand, because the offerer ...
That is, your first-fruits, of corn, and wine, and oil, and other fruits. And these are called the heave-offerings of their hand, because the offerer was first to take these into his hands, and to heave them before the Lord, and then to give them to the priest.
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Wesley: Deu 12:6 - -- Even your voluntary oblations, which were not due by my prescription, but only by your own choice: you may chuse what kind of offering you please to o...
Even your voluntary oblations, which were not due by my prescription, but only by your own choice: you may chuse what kind of offering you please to offer, but not the place where you shall offer them.
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Wesley: Deu 12:7 - -- Not in the most holy place, wherein only the priests might eat, but in places allowed to the people for this, end in the holy city.
Not in the most holy place, wherein only the priests might eat, but in places allowed to the people for this, end in the holy city.
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In the place of God's presence, where God's sanctuary shall be.
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Wesley: Deu 12:8 - -- Where the inconveniency of the place, and the uncertainty of our abode, would not permit exact order in sacrifices and feasts and ceremonies, which th...
Where the inconveniency of the place, and the uncertainty of our abode, would not permit exact order in sacrifices and feasts and ceremonies, which therefore God was then pleased to dispense with; but, saith he, he will not do so there.
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Wesley: Deu 12:8 - -- Not that universal liberty was given to all persons to worship how they listed; but in many things their unsettled condition gave opportunity to do so...
Not that universal liberty was given to all persons to worship how they listed; but in many things their unsettled condition gave opportunity to do so.
JFB: Deu 12:1 - -- Having in the preceding chapter inculcated upon the Israelites the general obligation to fear and love God, Moses here enters into a detail of some sp...
Having in the preceding chapter inculcated upon the Israelites the general obligation to fear and love God, Moses here enters into a detail of some special duties they were to practise on their obtaining possession of the promised land.
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JFB: Deu 12:2 - -- This divine command was founded on the tendencies of human nature; for to remove out of sight everything that had been associated with idolatry, that ...
This divine command was founded on the tendencies of human nature; for to remove out of sight everything that had been associated with idolatry, that it might never be spoken of and no vestige of it remain, was the only effectual way to keep the Israelites from temptations to it. It is observable that Moses does not make any mention of temples, for such buildings were not in existence at that early period. The "places" chosen as the scene of heathen worship were situated either on the summit of a lofty mountain, or on some artificial mound, or in a grove, planted with particular trees, such as oaks, poplars, and elms (Isa 57:5-7; Hos 4:13). The reason for the selection of such sites was both to secure retirement and to direct the attention upward to heaven; and the "place" was nothing else than a consecrated enclosure, or at most, a canopy or screen from the weather.
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JFB: Deu 12:3 - -- Before the art of sculpture was known, the statues of idols were only rude blocks of colored stones.
Before the art of sculpture was known, the statues of idols were only rude blocks of colored stones.
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JFB: Deu 12:5 - -- They were forbidden to worship either in the impure superstitious manner of the heathen, or in any of the places frequented by them. A particular plac...
They were forbidden to worship either in the impure superstitious manner of the heathen, or in any of the places frequented by them. A particular place for the general rendezvous of all the tribes would be chosen by God Himself; and the choice of one common place for the solemn rites of religion was an act of divine wisdom, for the security of the true religion. It was admirably calculated to prevent the corruption which would otherwise have crept in from their frequenting groves and high hills--to preserve uniformity of worship and keep alive their faith in Him to whom all their sacrifices pointed. The place was successively Mizpeh, Shiloh, and especially Jerusalem. But in all the references made to it by Moses, the name is never mentioned. This studied silence was maintained partly lest the Canaanites within whose territories it lay might have concentrated their forces to frustrate all hopes of obtaining it; partly lest the desire of possessing a place of such importance might have become a cause of strife or rivalry amongst the Hebrew tribes, as about the appointment to the priesthood (Num. 16:1-30).
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JFB: Deu 12:7 - -- Of the things mentioned (Deu 12:6); but of course, none of the parts assigned to the priests before the Lord--in the place where the sanctuary should ...
Of the things mentioned (Deu 12:6); but of course, none of the parts assigned to the priests before the Lord--in the place where the sanctuary should be established, and in those parts of the Holy City which the people were at liberty to frequent and inhabit.
Clarke -> Deu 12:3
Clarke: Deu 12:3 - -- Ye shall overthrow their altars - Where unholy sacrifices have been offered; and break their pillars, probably meaning statues and representations o...
Ye shall overthrow their altars - Where unholy sacrifices have been offered; and break their pillars, probably meaning statues and representations of their gods cut out of stone; and burn their groves, such as those about the temple of Ashtaroth, the Canaanitish Venus, whose impure rites were practiced in different parts of the enclosures or groves round her temples; and ye shall hew down the graven images, probably implying all images carved out of wood; and destroy the names of them, which were no doubt at first graven on the stones, and carved on the trees, and then applied to the surrounding districts. In various instances the names of whole mountains, valleys, and districts were borrowed from the gods worshipped there.
Calvin: Deu 12:4 - -- 4.Ye shall not do so unto the Lord your God The principal distinction, as far as regards the external exercises of devotion, is here laid down betwee...
4.Ye shall not do so unto the Lord your God The principal distinction, as far as regards the external exercises of devotion, is here laid down between the legitimate worship of God, and all the fictitious rites which the Gentiles have invented; viz., that God would have but one sanctuary and one altar, which might be a symbol of the difference between Himself and all idols; and thus that true religion should have no affinity to superstitions. To this refers the prohibition, that the Israelites should not conduct themselves towards God as the Gentiles did towards their idols; but that a barrier should be raised, which would separate 103 them from the whole world. The whole external profession of God’s worship is fitly annexed to the Second Commandment, because upon that it depends, and has no other object than its due observation. But when I begin to speak of the tabernacle, the priesthood, and the sacrifices, I am entering on a deep and vast ocean, in which many interpreters, whilst indulging their curiosity, have pursued a wild and wandering course. Admonished, therefore, by their example, I will take in my sails, and only touch upon a few points which tend to edification in the faith. But my readers must now be requested, not only to pardon me for abstaining from subtle speculations, but also themselves willingly to keep within the bounds of simplicity. Many have itching ears; and in our natural vanity, most men are more delighted by foolish allegories, than by solid erudition. But let those who shall desire to profit in God’s school, learn to restrain this perverse desire of knowing more than is good for them, although it may tickle their minds. Now let us consider the words of Moses.
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Calvin: Deu 12:7 - -- 7.And there shall ye eat We see that the sanctuary in which God manifested Himself is called His face; 105 for, although believers are taught that al...
7.And there shall ye eat We see that the sanctuary in which God manifested Himself is called His face; 105 for, although believers are taught that always, wherever they dwell, they walk before God; yet they placed themselves nearer, and in some special manner in His sight, when they approached His sanctuary. By this mode of speaking God also stimulates the laziness or tardiness of the people, lest it should be irksome to them to come to the Ark of the Covenant for the purpose of sacrificing, inasmuch as this inestimable benefit would compensate for the labor and expense of the journey. I have elsewhere shewn that, when men are said to feast before the Lord, sacred feasts are thus distinguished from our daily meals. For this was as it were an accessory to the sacrifices, to eat what remained of the victims; and in this way the guests were made partakers of the offering, which custom even heathen nations imitated, though improperly. Again, God kindly invites them when He says, “ye shall rejoice in all that thou puttest thine hands unto,” for which some translate it, “in everything to which you shall have sent your hand;” literally it is, “in the sending forth of the land.” There is no ambiguity in the sense, for it refers to those works which require the motion and application of the hands. A little below, where I have translated it, “which he hath blessed,” ( quibus benedixerit,) some insert the proposition in, and supply the pronoun you, ( i.e., in which he hath blessed you;) but it is quite appropriate to say, that God blesses their works, although it may be understood of their families also. As to the command that the tithes should be eaten in the holy place, I do not extend it to tithes in general, 106 for it was hardly probable that the food of those who were dispersed through various cities should be transferred to another place, so that they would perish (at home) 107 from hunger; but I understand it of the second tithes, which the Levites separated to be a special and peculiar oblation; for we shall see elsewhere that what remained over passed into the nature of ordinary produce, as if the Levites ate of the fruits of their own possessions.
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Calvin: Deu 12:8 - -- 8.Ye shall not do after all Even then they observed the rite of sacrifice handed down to them from the fathers; but since as yet they were wandering ...
8.Ye shall not do after all Even then they observed the rite of sacrifice handed down to them from the fathers; but since as yet they were wandering in the desert, it was lawful for them to build altars anywhere, until an end should be put to their journeyings. And this Moses expressly declares, adding the reason, viz., that they had not yet entered into the rest which the Lord had promised them. He shews them, then, that when they shall have attained the tranquil possession of the land, there would be no further room for excuse if they should sacrifice wheresoever it pleased them. When, therefore, it is said that they then did “ever y man whatsoever was right in his own eyes,” it does not extend to any of the inventions which men devise for themselves in the worship of God, but only points out a freer system and form in the exercise of devotion, before the place was shewn them in which they must stay their foot. 108
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Calvin: Deu 12:10 - -- 10.But when ye go over Jordan This verse confirms what I have before said, that the Jews were constrained to a certain rule as soon as they should ha...
10.But when ye go over Jordan This verse confirms what I have before said, that the Jews were constrained to a certain rule as soon as they should have reached the promised land; and yet that the place in which the Ark was perpetually to rest, would not be immediately manifested to them; for what is declared at the end of the verse, that God would give them rest round about, so that they should dwell in safety, was not in fact perfectly exhibited before the time of David. Still God would have them, as soon as they were in enjoyment of the land, come together even from their remotest boundaries to the sanctuary. He omits certain kinds of offerings of which he had lately spoken, and puts, instead of “vows, ” 109 “the choice vows,” which some translate “very choice vows,” or “the chief things in your vows.” I do not reject this; but the other sense is more simple, that all the vows were comprised which every one had made of his own free judgment and choice. Soon afterwards he more fully expresses his meaning, when he prohibits them from offering sacrifices of their own accord in any places that might please them; for, “to see a place, ” here, is equivalent to being carried away by the sight, so as to connect religion and holiness with elegance and beauty.
TSK: Deu 12:1 - -- the statutes : Deu 4:1, Deu 4:2, Deu 4:5, Deu 4:45, Deu 6:1, Deu 6:2
all the days : Deu 12:19, Deu 4:19; 1Ki 8:40; Job 7:1; Psa 104:33, Psa 146:2
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TSK: Deu 12:2 - -- utterly : Deu 7:5, Deu 7:25, Deu 7:26; Exo 23:24, Exo 34:12-17; Num 33:51, Num 33:52; Jdg 2:2
possess : or, inherit, Num 22:41; 2Ki 16:4, 2Ki 17:10, 2...
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TSK: Deu 12:3 - -- ye shall : Num 33:52; Jdg 2:2; 2Ch 31:1
overthrow : Heb. break down
and burn : 1Ki 15:13; 2Ki 18:4, 2Ki 23:14; 2Ch 14:3, 2Ch 19:3, 2Ch 34:3; Jer 17:2;...
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TSK: Deu 12:5 - -- But unto : Deu 12:11, Deu 16:2, Deu 26:2; Jos 9:27, Jos 18:1; 1Ki 8:16, 1Ki 8:20, 1Ki 8:29, 1Ki 14:21; 1Ch 22:1; 2Ch 7:12; Psa 78:68, Psa 87:2, Psa 87...
But unto : Deu 12:11, Deu 16:2, Deu 26:2; Jos 9:27, Jos 18:1; 1Ki 8:16, 1Ki 8:20, 1Ki 8:29, 1Ki 14:21; 1Ch 22:1; 2Ch 7:12; Psa 78:68, Psa 87:2, Psa 87:3; Joh 4:20-22; Heb 12:22; Rev 14:1
habitation : Exo 15:2, Exo 25:22; Num 7:89; 1Ki 8:27; Psa 132:13, Psa 132:14; Isa 66:1, Isa 66:2; Act 7:48-50; Eph 2:20-22; Col 2:9
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TSK: Deu 12:6 - -- your burnt : Lev 17:3-9; Eze 20:40
tithes : Deu 12:17, Deu 14:22-26, Deu 15:19, Deu 15:20, Deu 26:2; Lev 27:32, Lev 27:33; Num 18:15-17; Mal 3:8, Mal ...
your burnt : Lev 17:3-9; Eze 20:40
tithes : Deu 12:17, Deu 14:22-26, Deu 15:19, Deu 15:20, Deu 26:2; Lev 27:32, Lev 27:33; Num 18:15-17; Mal 3:8, Mal 3:10; Luk 11:42, Luk 18:12
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TSK: Deu 12:7 - -- And there : Deu 12:18, Deu 14:23, Deu 14:26, Deu 15:20; Isa 23:18
ye shall : Deu 12:12, Deu 12:18, Deu 16:11-15, Deu 26:11, Deu 27:7; Lev 23:40; Psa 1...
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TSK: Deu 12:10 - -- But when : Deu 3:27, Deu 4:22, Deu 9:1, Deu 11:31; Jos 3:17, Jos 4:1, Jos 4:12
ye dwell : Deu 33:12, Deu 33:28; Lev 25:18, Lev 25:19; 1Sa 7:12; 1Ki 4:...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Deu 12:1 - -- Moses now passes on to apply Deut. 12\endash 26 the leading principles of the Decalogue to the ecclesiastical, civil, and social life of the people....
Moses now passes on to apply Deut. 12\endash 26 the leading principles of the Decalogue to the ecclesiastical, civil, and social life of the people. Particulars will be noticed which are unique to the Law as given in Deuteronomy; and even in laws repeated from the earlier books various new circumstances and details are introduced. This is only natural. The Sinaitic legislation was nearly 40 years old and had been given under conditions of time, place, and circumstance different and distant from those now present. Yet the Sinaitic system, far from being set aside or in any way abrogated, is on the contrary throughout presupposed and assumed. Its existence and authority are taken as the starting-point for what is here prescribed, and an accurate acquaintance with it on the part of the people is taken for granted.
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Barnes: Deu 12:4 - -- i. e., "The idolaters set up their altars and images on any high hill, and under every green tree at their pleasure, but ye shall not do so; the Lor...
i. e., "The idolaters set up their altars and images on any high hill, and under every green tree at their pleasure, but ye shall not do so; the Lord Himself shall determine the spot for your worship, and there only shall ye seek Him."The religion of the Canaanites was human; its modes of worship were of man’ s devising. It fixed its holy places on the hills in the vain thought of being nearer heaven, or in deep groves where the silence and gloom might overawe the worshipper. But such superstitious appliances were not worthy of the true religion. God had revealed Himself to people in it, and manifested among them His immediate presence and power. He would Himself assign the sanctuary and the ritual of His own service.
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Barnes: Deu 12:5 - -- "To put his name there"means to manifest to men His divine presence. The Targumists rightly refer to the Shechinah; but the expression comprehends a...
"To put his name there"means to manifest to men His divine presence. The Targumists rightly refer to the Shechinah; but the expression comprehends all the various modes in which God vouchsafed to reveal Himself and His attributes to men.
The purpose of the command of the text is to secure the unity, and through unity the purity of the worship of God. That there should be one national center for the religion of the people was obviously essential to the great ends of the whole dispensation. Corruption began as soon as the precepts of the text were relaxed or neglected: Compare the case of Gideon, Jdg 8:27; of Micah, Judg. 18; of Jeroboam, 1Ki 12:26 ff.
The words "the place which the Lord shall choose to put His Name there"suggest Jerusalem and Solomon’ s temple to our minds. But though spoken as they were by a prophet, and interpreted as they are by the Psalms (e. g. Psa 78:67-69), they have a proper application to the temple, yet they must not be referred exclusively to it. The text does not import that God would always from the first choose one and the same locality "to put His Name there,"but that there would always be a locality so chosen by Him; and that there the people must bring their sacrifices, and not offer them at their pleasure or convenience elsewhere. Neither does the text forbid the offering of sacrifices to God at other places than the one chosen by Him "to put His Name there"on proper occasions and by proper authority (compare Deu 27:5-6; Jdg 6:24; Jdg 13:16; 1Ki 3:4; 1Ki 18:31). The text simply prohibits sacrifices at any other locality than that which should be appointed or permitted by God for the purpose.
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Barnes: Deu 12:6 - -- Some have objected that this command cannot possibly have been ever carried out, at all events until in later (lays the territory which owned obedie...
Some have objected that this command cannot possibly have been ever carried out, at all events until in later (lays the territory which owned obedience to it was narrowed to the little kingdom of Judah. But in these and in other precepts Moses doubtless takes much for granted. He is here, as elsewhere, regulating and defining more precisely institutions which had long been in existence, as to many details of which custom superseded the necessity of specific enactment. No doubt the people well understood what Maimonides expressly tells us in reference to the matter, namely, that where immediate payment could not be made, the debt to God was to be reserved until the next great Feast, and then duly discharged. The thing especially to be observed was that no kind of sacrifice was to be offered except at the sacred spot fixed by God for its acceptance.
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Barnes: Deu 12:7 - -- An injunction that the feasts which accompanied certain offerings (not specified) were to be also held in the same place.
An injunction that the feasts which accompanied certain offerings (not specified) were to be also held in the same place.
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Barnes: Deu 12:8 - -- Moses points out that heretofore they had not observed the prescribed order in their worship, because during their migratory life in the wilderness ...
Moses points out that heretofore they had not observed the prescribed order in their worship, because during their migratory life in the wilderness it had been impossible to do so. During their wanderings there were doubtless times when the tabernacle was not set up for days together, and when the daily sacrifice Num 28:3, together with many other ordinances, were necessarily omitted (compare Jos 5:5). This consideration must be carefully borne in mind throughout Deuteronomy. It illustrates the necessity for a repetition of very much of the Sinaitic legislation, and suggests the reason why some parts are so urgently reiterated and impressed, while others are left unnoticed. Moses now warns the people that as they were about to quit their unsettled mode of life, God’ s purpose of choosing for Himself a place to set His Name there would be executed, and the whole of the sacred ritual would consequently become obligatory. The "rest and safety"of Canaan is significantly laid down Deu 12:10-11 as the indispensable condition and basis for an entire fulfillment of the Law: the perfection of righteousness coinciding thus with the cessation of wanderings, dangers, and toils.
Poole: Deu 12:2 - -- All the places temples, chapels, altars, groves, as appears from other scriptures. The Gentiles used to employ the
high mountains for their idolatr...
All the places temples, chapels, altars, groves, as appears from other scriptures. The Gentiles used to employ the
high mountains for their idolatry; see Isa 57:5,7 Eze 6:13 Hos 4:13and as they consecrated divers trees to their false gods, so they worshipped these under them:
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Poole: Deu 12:3 - -- Their pillars upon which their images were set. The names of them , i.e. all the memorials of them, and the very names given to the places from the ...
Their pillars upon which their images were set. The names of them , i.e. all the memorials of them, and the very names given to the places from the idols.
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Poole: Deu 12:4 - -- i.e. Not worship him in several places, mountains, groves, &c., which sense is evident from the following opposition.
i.e. Not worship him in several places, mountains, groves, &c., which sense is evident from the following opposition.
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Poole: Deu 12:5 - -- To put his name there i.e. to set up hiss worship there, or which he shall call by his name, as his house, or dwelling-place, &c., to wit, where the ...
To put his name there i.e. to set up hiss worship there, or which he shall call by his name, as his house, or dwelling-place, &c., to wit, where the ark should be, the tabernacle, or temple; which was first Shiloh, Jos 18:1 , next and especially Jerusalem.
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Poole: Deu 12:6 - -- The
sacrifices were wisely appropriated to that one and public place, partly for the security of the true religion, and for the prevention of idol...
The
sacrifices were wisely appropriated to that one and public place, partly for the security of the true religion, and for the prevention of idolatry and superstition, which otherwise might more easily have crept in; and partly to signify that their sacrifices were not accepted for their own worth, but by God’ s gracious appointment, and for the sake of God’ s altar, by which they were sanctified, and for the sake of Christ, whom the altar did manifestly represent. Of
tithes , See Poole "Deu 12:17" .
Heave-offerings i.e. your first-fruits, to wit, of the earth, as of corn and wine and oil and other fruits, as plainly appears by comparing this place with Deu 18:4 26:2 , where these are commanded to be brought thither; and seeing here is an exact and particular enumeration of all such things, and these cannot be put under any of the other branches, these must needs be intended here, the rather because the other kind of first-fruits, to wit, of the
herds and
flocks are here expressly mentioned. And these are called here the heave-offerings of their hand , because the offerer was first to take these into his hands, and to heave them before the Lord, (as other places tell us,) and then to give them to the priest, as appears from Deu 18:3,4 26:4 .
Your free-will offerings even for your voluntary oblations, which were not due by my prescription, but only by your own choice and voluntary engagement: you may choose what kind of offering you please to vow and offer, but not the place where you shall offer them.
The firstlings of your herds and of your flocks either,
1. The holy firstlings or first-born, as appears by Nu 18 , where they are commanded to be brought to this one place here designed, and to be offered upon God’ s altar, Deu 12:17 . It is objected by some, that those were given to the priests, Num 18:18 , but these were to be eaten by the people here, Deu 12:7 . But that the next verse doth not say, but only in general, there shall ye eat , to wit, such of the offerings mentioned Deu 12:6 as they were allowed to eat, but not such as were the priest’ s peculiar, for these they might not eat, nor all there expressed; for it is evident they might not eat any of the burnt-offerings, nor some parts of the other sacrifices, which are here mentioned. Or,
2. The second births, which were the people’ s first-born , or the first which they could eat of, which they were to eat before the Lord by way of acknowledgment of his favour in giving them to them and all their succeeding births. See more on Deu 12:17 .
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Poole: Deu 12:7 - -- There not in the most holy place, wherein only the priests might eat, Num 18:10 , but more generally in places allowed to the people for this end in ...
There not in the most holy place, wherein only the priests might eat, Num 18:10 , but more generally in places allowed to the people for this end in the holy city.
Ye shall eat to wit, your part of the things mentioned Deu 12:6 .
Before the Lord i.e. in the place of God’ s presence, where God’ s sanctuary shall be.
All that ye put your hand unto either to bestow your pains and labour upon it; or, to take and use or enjoy it. The sense is, You thus doing shall be blessed and enabled to rejoice, or to take comfort in all your labours and enjoyments, which otherwise would be accursed to you. We have the same phrase below, Deu 12:18 15:10 .
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Poole: Deu 12:8 - -- Here where the inconveniency of the place, and the uncertainty of our abode in and removal from several places, would not permit exact order in sacri...
Here where the inconveniency of the place, and the uncertainty of our abode in and removal from several places, would not permit exact order in sacrifices, and feasts, and ceremonies, which therefore God was pleased then to dispense with; but, saith he, he will not do so there.
Every man whatsoever is right in his own eyes not that universal liberty was given to all persons to worship whom and how they listed, but that in many things their unsettled condition gave every one opportunity to do so if he thought good.
Haydock: Deu 12:1 - -- That only do thou, &c. They are forbid here to follow the ceremonies of the heathens, or to make any alterations in the divine ordinances. (Challon...
That only do thou, &c. They are forbid here to follow the ceremonies of the heathens, or to make any alterations in the divine ordinances. (Challoner) ---
To adopt fresh regulations, in the same spirit, was not forbidden. Thus David ordered those who had kept the baggage, to share equally with the soldiers who had gone into battle; (1 Kings xxx.) and our Saviour approved, by his presence, the feast of the dedication of the temple, instituted long after Moses, 1 Machabees iv., and John x. (Worthington) ---
He perfected the law by the precepts of the gospel, Matthew v. 17. Jospehus (contra Apion ii.) says, "During so many years, no one has dared to retrench any thing from, (the sacred books) or to make any addition to them. We look upon them as of divine authority,....and we would lay down our lives, if necessary, to defend them. (Calmet) Among us, who believe that the law was first given by the will of God, noting is pious but the exact observance of it. For who can introduce any change, or invent any thing better?" (Chap. iv. 2.) Christ is full of grace and truth, John i. He has fulfilled the law and the prophets. (Haydock) St. Augustine, contra Faustus xvii. 2, and xix. 9.---" Grace, " says he, "pertains to the fulness of charity, truth to the completion of the prophecies." (Du Hamel)
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Haydock: Deu 12:1 - -- These. Having inculcated the general precepts, and the obligation of loving God above all things, Moses now descends to particular duties. (Calmet)
These. Having inculcated the general precepts, and the obligation of loving God above all things, Moses now descends to particular duties. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Deu 12:2 - -- Tree. See Genesis xxi. 33. All the monuments of idolatry must be destroyed. The very names of the idols must be abhorred and obliterated, (Exodus ...
Tree. See Genesis xxi. 33. All the monuments of idolatry must be destroyed. The very names of the idols must be abhorred and obliterated, (Exodus xxiii. 13,) to shew that they have lost possession of the country. So, (ver. 5,) to put his name there, means to take possession of a place.
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Haydock: Deu 12:3 - -- Statues. The most ancient idols were not finely carved, but only rough stones. The Phrygian goddess, sent to Rome by Attalus, was a small dark-colo...
Statues. The most ancient idols were not finely carved, but only rough stones. The Phrygian goddess, sent to Rome by Attalus, was a small dark-coloured stone of this nature. (Arnob., contra Gentes. 8.) ---
The Venus of the Arabs was but a stone in the form of a pyramid. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Deu 12:5 - -- It, where the ark was to be kept. (Haydock) ---
Before the building of the temple, it was removed from one tribe or place to another. Jerusalem wa...
It, where the ark was to be kept. (Haydock) ---
Before the building of the temple, it was removed from one tribe or place to another. Jerusalem was thenceforward styled the city of the great king, Psalm xlvii. 1, 9.
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Haydock: Deu 12:6 - -- Hands, which you have procured by your industry, (Menochius) or what you are able to present to the Lord, Leviticus v. 11.
Hands, which you have procured by your industry, (Menochius) or what you are able to present to the Lord, Leviticus v. 11.
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Haydock: Deu 12:7 - -- You. In gratitude, you shall therefore offer your victims. (Haydock) ---
The Jews were accustomed to make a feast thrice a year in the holy city. ...
You. In gratitude, you shall therefore offer your victims. (Haydock) ---
The Jews were accustomed to make a feast thrice a year in the holy city. They might also eat some parts of the peace-offerings. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Deu 12:8 - -- Himself. Some confine this to the sacrifices, which each person might offer, where he thought proper, till the ark was fixed at Silo. But many othe...
Himself. Some confine this to the sacrifices, which each person might offer, where he thought proper, till the ark was fixed at Silo. But many other parts of the ceremonial law, seem not to have been in force till the Hebrews crossed the Jordan, Amos v. 25. Circumcision was omitted, as well as most of the festivals. Several laws were, however, designed for the people during their sojournment, such as those which regard the order of judgment, the cleanness of the camp, the purification of women, and of those who had touched a dead body, &c., Exodus xviii. 25., Numbers v. 2., and Leviticus xv. 31. It was not left to their option to observe or to neglect the sabbath, (Numbers xv. 32,) the loaves of proposition, or the perpetual fire, &c., Numbers iv. 7, 13. (Calmet)
Gill: Deu 12:1 - -- These are the statutes and judgments which ye shall observe to do,.... Which are recorded in this and the following chapters; here a new discourse beg...
These are the statutes and judgments which ye shall observe to do,.... Which are recorded in this and the following chapters; here a new discourse begins, and which perhaps was delivered at another time, and respects things that were to be observed:
in the land which the Lord God of thy fathers giveth thee to possess it; the land of Canaan, often described by this circumlocution, to put them in mind that it was promised to their fathers by their covenant God, was his gift to them, and which they would quickly be in the possession of; and therefore when in it should be careful to observe the statutes and judgments of God constantly:
even all the days that ye live upon the earth; or land, the land of Canaan; for though there were some laws binding upon them, live where they would, there were others peculiar to the land of Canaan, which they were to observe as long as they and their posterity lived there; see 1Ki 8:40.
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Gill: Deu 12:2 - -- Ye shall utterly destroy all the places wherein the nations which ye shall possess served their gods,.... The temples erected for the worship of them ...
Ye shall utterly destroy all the places wherein the nations which ye shall possess served their gods,.... The temples erected for the worship of them by the Canaanites, of which there were many, as appears by the various names of places given them from the temples in them, as Bethshemesh, Bethbaalmeon, Bethpeor, and others:
upon the high mountains and upon the hills: which they chose to worship on, being nearer the heavens, and which they thought most acceptable to their gods; and some of them had their names from hence, as Baalpeor, in like manner as Jupiter Olympius was called by the Greeks; see Jer 2:20,
and under every green tree; which being shady and solitary, and pleasant to the sight, they fancied their gods delighted in, and this notion prevailed among other nations; and there is scarcely any deity but what had some tree or another devoted to it; as the oak to Jupiter, the laurel to Apollo, the ivy to Bacchus, the olive to Minerva, the myrtle to Venus, &c. see Jer 2:20.
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Gill: Deu 12:3 - -- And you shall overthrow their altars,.... Which were of stone, as Jarchi observes; whereas the altar ordered to be made by the Lord, before the altar ...
And you shall overthrow their altars,.... Which were of stone, as Jarchi observes; whereas the altar ordered to be made by the Lord, before the altar of burnt offering in the tabernacle was made, was of earth, Exo 20:24 these were to be demolished, lest the Israelites should be tempted to make use of them; and besides, the Lord would not have any remains of idolatry in the land where his tabernacle and worship were, as being abominable to him:
and break down their pillars; or statues erected to the honour of their idols; according to Jarchi it was a single stone hewed out at first for the basis of a statue y; perhaps such as were called Baetulia, in imitation of the stone Jacob set up for a pillar at Bethel, Gen 28:18.
and burn their groves with fire; which were planted about their temples, and under which also their idols were placed, and where they privately committed the most abominable lewdness under the notion of religion. The Targum of Jonathan renders the word "abominations", meaning idols; and so Jarchi interprets it by a tree that is worshipped; See Gill on Deu 7:5.
and you shall hew down the graven images of their gods; which were made of wood:
and destroy the names of them out of the place; by never making any mention of them in common discourse, and by changing the names of places called from them; and especially by destroying all the relics of them, and whatever appertained to them, which might lead to the mention of them; see Hos 2:17.
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Gill: Deu 12:4 - -- Ye shall not do so unto the Lord your God. Not sacrifice to him on hills and mountains, and under green trees; though the Jews commonly refer this to ...
Ye shall not do so unto the Lord your God. Not sacrifice to him on hills and mountains, and under green trees; though the Jews commonly refer this to the destruction of the names of God, and of any thing appertaining to the temple; that though the temples and the altars of the Heathens were to be overthrown, yet not a stone was to be taken from the house of God, or that belonged to it, nor any of his names to be blotted out; so the Targum of Jonathan and Maimonides z, who also observes a, that whoever removes a stone by way of destruction from the altar, or from the temple, or from the court, is to be beaten; so he that burns the holy wood.
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Gill: Deu 12:5 - -- But unto the place which the Lord your God,.... The Targum of Jonathan is, that the Word of the Lord your God:
shall choose out of all your tribes ...
But unto the place which the Lord your God,.... The Targum of Jonathan is, that the Word of the Lord your God:
shall choose out of all your tribes to put his name there; to place his tabernacle, set up his worship, take up his residence, and cause the Shechinah, or his divine Majesty, to dwell there, as the next clause explains it; out of what tribe it should be chosen, and where it should be, is not said. Maimomides b gives three reasons for it; he says there are three great mysteries why the place is not clearly, but obscurely mentioned;1) lest the Gentiles should seize upon it, and make war for the sake of it, supposing this place to be the end of the law; 2) lest they in whose hands the place then was should by all means waste and destroy it; 3) which is the chief, lest every tribe should desire to have it in its own lot and jurisdiction; and so strifes might arise among them on account of it, as happened to the priesthood:
even unto his habitation shall ye seek; the temple at Jerusalem is meant, where the Lord took up his dwelling, and whither men were to come and seek unto him by prayer and supplication for whatsoever they needed, and to inquire of him in matters doubtful, and they wanted counsel in:
and thither thou shall come: with sacrifices of every sort, where they were to be slain and offered to the Lord, and become acceptable to him, as is more largely declared in the following part of this chapter.
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Gill: Deu 12:6 - -- And thither ye shall bring your burnt offerings,.... For the daily sacrifice, and upon any other account whatsoever; this was before ordered to be bro...
And thither ye shall bring your burnt offerings,.... For the daily sacrifice, and upon any other account whatsoever; this was before ordered to be brought to the door of the tabernacle of the congregation, and now to the place where that should be fixed, Lev 17:8.
and your sacrifices: all other distinct from burnt offerings, as sin offerings, trespass offerings, and peace offerings, especially the latter. Jarchi interprets them of peace offerings of debt, such as a man was obliged to bring; but as the distance of some persons from Jerusalem was very great, and it was troublesome and expensive, they might, according to the Jewish writers, bring them the next grand festival, when all the males were obliged to appear there; so says Maimonides c, all offerings of a man, whether by obligation (such as he was bound to bring) or freewill offerings, he must bring at the first feast that comes; and another of their writers observes d, that if only one feast has passed, and he has not brought his vow, he transgresses an affirmative precept, Deu 12:6 the first feast on which thou comest thither, thou must needs bring it; and if three have passed, he transgresses a negative precept, Deu 23:21.
and your tithes; tithes of beasts, and the second tithes, according to Jarchi:
and heave offerings of your hand; these according to the same writer were the firstfruits, and so it is rendered in the Septuagint version; and thus Maimonides e says, the firstfruits are called Trumot, or heave offerings; see Exo 22:29.
and your vows and your freewill offerings; which were a type of peace offerings, Lev 7:16.
and the firstlings of your herds and of your flocks; which were sanctified and devoted to the Lord, Exo 13:2.
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Gill: Deu 12:7 - -- And there ye shall eat before the Lord your God,.... The priests and the Levites, what was their portion, so Aben Ezra; but the people also are includ...
And there ye shall eat before the Lord your God,.... The priests and the Levites, what was their portion, so Aben Ezra; but the people also are included, and by what follows seem chiefly designed, who were to eat their part of the sacrifices, particularly of the tithes and peace offerings, in the holy place that should be chosen and appointed; see Deu 14:22.
and ye shall rejoice in all that ye put your hand unto; in all the labours of their hands, and what they got thereby, which they were cheerfully to enjoy, and express their thankfulness for it in this way; see Ecc 5:18.
ye and your households; their wives, sons, daughters, men and maid servants; yea, with them Levites, strangers, fatherless, and widows, were to partake of some of their freewill offerings, Deu 16:10.
wherein the Lord thy God hath blessed thee; and these offerings were eucharistical, and by way of thanksgiving for the blessing of God upon their labours, for it is that which maketh rich, Pro 10:22.
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Gill: Deu 12:8 - -- Ye shall not do after all the things that we do here,.... In the wilderness, where they had no abiding, but were continually removing from place to pl...
Ye shall not do after all the things that we do here,.... In the wilderness, where they had no abiding, but were continually removing from place to place, and could not always observe punctually and precisely the exact order and time of their sacrifices and other things, nor offer them at any certain place, and many were doubtless neglected by them; see Amo 5:25.
every man whatsoever is right in his own eyes; that did he, brought the above things when and where he pleased; not that there was no regard had to the laws and rules given, as if there was no priest in Israel; but they were not so exactly in all circumstances conformed to as they would be obliged to when they came into the land of Canaan, and had a certain place to bring their offerings to; so some in Aben Ezra observe, that one would give the firstling, another not, because it depended on the land, or was what they were obliged to only when they came into the land of Canaan; see Exo 13:11 but he thinks the sense is, that they did not all fear God, and so did not do their duty.
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Gill: Deu 12:9 - -- For ye are not yet come to the rest,.... The land of Canaan, which was typical of the rest which remains for the people of God in heaven; for though t...
For ye are not yet come to the rest,.... The land of Canaan, which was typical of the rest which remains for the people of God in heaven; for though they now enter into a spiritual rest in Christ, they are not yet come to their eternal rest; they are in a world of trouble, through sin, Satan, and wicked men; but they shall come to it, as Israel did to Canaan; for God has promised and prepared it, and it remains for them; Christ prayed for it, is also gone to prepare it, and the Spirit is the seal and earnest of it, and works up the saints, and makes them meet for it:
and to the inheritance which the Lord your God giveth you; and the land of Canaan being an inheritance, and the gift of God, was also a type of the heavenly inheritance; which saints are now born unto, and have both a right unto, and meetness for, through the righteousness of Christ, and grace of God; but as yet are not entered on it, but that is reserved for them in heaven, and they are preserved and kept for that; and ere long shall inherit it, as the free gift of God their Father to them, and which is peculiar to them as children. Jarchi and Ben Melech by the "rest" understand Shiloh, and by the inheritance Jerusalem; so in the Misnah f; see 1Ch 23:25 the Targum of Jonathan is,"ye are not come to the house of the sanctuary, which is the house of rest, and to the inheritance of the land.''
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Gill: Deu 12:10 - -- But when ye go over Jordan,.... Which lay between the place where they now were, and the land of Canaan, and which they would quickly go over:
and ...
But when ye go over Jordan,.... Which lay between the place where they now were, and the land of Canaan, and which they would quickly go over:
and dwell in the land which the Lord your God giveth you to inherit; the land of Canaan, and which shows that that is meant by the inheritance: and when
he giveth you rest from all your enemies round about: which was done when the land was subdued, and divided among the tribes of Israel, Jos 22:4 and which confirms the sense of Canaan being the rest; though this was more completely fulfilled in the days of David, when he and Israel had rest from all their enemies round about, 2Sa 7:1 and who brought the ark of the Lord to Jerusalem; and into whose heart the Lord put it to prepare to build a temple at Jerusalem for him, and which was erected and finished in the days of his son Solomon:
so that ye dwell in safety; from their enemies, as they more especially did in the reigns of David and Solomon; which seems plainly to describe the time when the place not named should appear to be chosen by the Lord to put his name in, as follows.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Deu 12:1 Heb “you must be careful to obey in the land the Lord, the God of your fathers, has given you to possess all the days which you live in the land...
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NET Notes: Deu 12:2 Every leafy tree. This expression refers to evergreens which, because they keep their foliage throughout the year, provided apt symbolism for nature c...
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NET Notes: Deu 12:3 Sacred Asherah poles. The Hebrew term (plural) is אֲשֵׁרִים (’asherim). See note on the wo...
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NET Notes: Deu 12:5 Some scholars, on the basis of v. 11, emend the MT reading שִׁכְנוֹ (shikhno, “his residenceR...
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NET Notes: Deu 12:10 In the Hebrew text vv. 10-11 are one long, complex sentence. For stylistic reasons the translation divides this into two sentences.
Geneva Bible: Deu 12:1 These [are] the statutes and judgments, which ye shall observe to do in the land, which the LORD God ( a ) of thy fathers giveth thee to possess it, a...
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Geneva Bible: Deu 12:3 And ye shall overthrow their altars, and break their pillars, and burn their ( b ) groves with fire; and ye shall hew down the graven images of their ...
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Geneva Bible: Deu 12:4 Ye shall ( c ) not do so unto the LORD your God.
( c ) You shall not serve the Lord with superstitions.
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Geneva Bible: Deu 12:6 And thither ye shall bring your burnt offerings, and your sacrifices, and your tithes, and heave ( d ) offerings of your hand, and your vows, and your...
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Geneva Bible: Deu 12:7 And there ye shall eat ( e ) before the LORD your God, and ye shall rejoice in all that ye put your hand unto, ye and your households, wherein the LOR...
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Geneva Bible: Deu 12:8 Ye shall not do after all [the things] that we do ( f ) here this day, every man whatsoever [is] right in his own eyes.
( f ) Not that they sacrifice...
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Geneva Bible: Deu 12:10 But [when] ye go over Jordan, and dwell in the land which the LORD your God giveth you to inherit, and [when] he giveth you ( g ) rest from all your e...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Deu 12:1-32
TSK Synopsis: Deu 12:1-32 - --1 Monuments of idolatry are to be destroyed.4 The place of God's service to be kept.15 Blood is forbidden.16 Blood is forbidden.17 Holy things must be...
MHCC -> Deu 12:1-4; Deu 12:5-32
MHCC: Deu 12:1-4 - --Moses comes to the statutes he had to give in charge to Israel; and begins with such as relate to the worship of God. The Israelites are charged not t...
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MHCC: Deu 12:5-32 - --The command to bring ALL the sacrifices to the door of the tabernacle, was now explained with reference to the promised land. As to moral service, the...
Matthew Henry -> Deu 12:1-4; Deu 12:5-32
Matthew Henry: Deu 12:1-4 - -- From those great original truths, That there is a God, and that there is but one God, arise those great fundamental laws, That that God is to be wor...
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Matthew Henry: Deu 12:5-32 - -- There is not any one particular precept (as I remember) in all the law of Moses so largely pressed and inculcated as this, by which they are all tie...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Deu 12:1-14
Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 12:1-14 - --
The laws relating to the worship of the Israelites commence with a command to destroy and annihilate all places and memorials of the Canaanitish wor...
Constable: Deu 5:1--26:19 - --IV. MOSES' SECOND MAJOR ADDRESS: AN EXPOSITION OF THE LAW chs. 5--26
". . . Deuteronomy contains the most compre...
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Constable: Deu 12:1--25:19 - --B. An exposition of selected covenant laws 12-25
Moses' homiletical exposition of the law of Israel that...
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Constable: Deu 12:1-31 - --1. Laws arising from the first commandment 12:1-31
The first commandment is, "You shall have no ...
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